Russia offers military support to Somalia
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, right, and Somali Foreign Minister Abshir Omar Jama attend a joint press conference following their talks in Moscow, May 26, 2023.
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Somali diplomats said Friday that Russia had
offered to help support Somalia’s armed forces in their battle against the
al-Shabab terrorist group.
The diplomats, who asked for anonymity
because they were not authorized to speak to reporters, said Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov had made the offer during talks with
his Somali counterpart, Abshir Omar Jama, in Moscow.
One diplomat said, “Russia was ready to
provide Somalia's army with military supplies, to strengthen the government
fight against al-Shabab.”
The diplomats did not specify the kinds of
materiel Russia was offering to Somalia, which is under a long-standing U.N.
arms embargo.
The U.N. Security Council imposed the embargo
in 1992 after the outbreak of civil war and factional violence. The embargo was
partially lifted in 2013 to help Somalia's security forces fight the Islamist
militants.
Russia’s offer came hours after al-Shabab
militants stormed a military base manned by African Union forces from Uganda in
Bulo Marer, an agricultural town in the Lower Shabelle region, about 110
kilometers south of Mogadishu.
Earlier, at the opening of the talks between
the two foreign ministers, Lavrov emphasized the long relationship between the
two countries, which goes back to quick Soviet recognition of Somalia after it
gained independence in 1960.
He also said he and Jama would discuss
preparations for the Russia-Africa summit scheduled for late July in St.
Petersburg.
In modern times, Russia and Somalia have had
fairly routine diplomatic relations, with Russia sending humanitarian aid to Somalia
several times.
In May 2010, Somalia reacted angrily to the
way Russian marines handled their rescue of a tanker, the MV Moscow
University, that had been hijacked 560 kilometers off the coast of Yemen.
Russian media reported at the time that 10
Somali pirates, who had taken the tanker and its crew hostage, were released on
the open sea because there were no grounds to prosecute them in Russia.
Somali authorities said the pirates never
made it ashore and likely died at sea.
Somalia’s Foreign Ministry statement at the
time warned that relations with Russia might be harmed over the incident and
demanded an apology from the Russian government.
Since then, two Somali prime ministers, Omar
Sharmarke and Hassan Ali Khaire, have met with top Russian officials requesting
assistance to strengthen the Somali National Army.
In recent years, Somali diplomats, who asked
for anonymity, told VOA Somali that the Russian military has been eyeing
Berbera port, located in the breakaway republic of Somaliland, as a potential
base on the Red Sea.
Last November, Russia, China, Gabon and Ghana
abstained from a Security Council vote to maintain an arms embargo on Somalia, in support of Mogadishu’s strong
objections. The United States and Britain supported maintaining the ban,
although the measure did loosen restrictions on some weapons like portable
surface-to-air missiles in recognition of the government’s improved oversight
of weapons and munitions.


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